REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

In the garden, and RAIN!!! (2)

POSTED BY: SIGNYM
UPDATED: Tuesday, June 23, 2026 15:17
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Tuesday, June 23, 2026 12:55 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by Brenda:
Yeah, SIX. I think a darker colour would work. A wood tone would be good to my eye.




Wait... what???... no!!!!

I didn't mean to have a 4th option added into the mix here.


I think maybe you seeing the wood handles on the faucet may have made you think that, even subconsciously? Good eye, if that's the case, because if I were keeping that faucet I believe I may have thought of doing that myself already.

I may not have mentioned it at all before, but I'm replacing that faucet. It's broke, and so is the drain in the basin. I will be replacing all of that with Oil Rubbed Bronze finish.

There is no wood grain tone anywhere in that picture in the future reality. Just a larger oil rubbed bronze faucet that matches my vanity light and the cabinet hardware.


But...

There is the wood grain on the backer board for the mirror inside the medicine cabinet...

No... that's pretty light wood in there. Much lighter than wood that I'd want to put on the wall there, so I couldn't even use that to justify it.



I'll have to sleep on it. Wasn't going to stay up all night painting anyway. But I should have everything that still needs to be painted the dark grey ready for their final paint and any touchups tomorrow. That should theoretically be everything once I've finished that and hung the towel rack shelf.


I am considering the possibility of adding several "holders" underneath the medicine cabinet and above the faucet. I always had them in my houses growing up and just kind of took them for granted until I was living here and didn't have them.

But I'll have to see if that's a bad idea that might take away from the value of the bathroom. I don't know about people's personal tastes on things like that when they're buying a home. I know I'd take good care of them, but even if they look great at selling time, unless you put it in there yourself or paid somebody else to do it for you, you know that other people have had their mouth germs from their toothbrushes in there. Especially after everybody endured Covid, I think these are good questions for me to be asking. I think if I find that issue is even 50/50 online I'm going to do without it and maybe buy something that can just sit on the basin or be hung temporarily that won't damage the wall long term.





ETA: Hey Brenda.... I didn't realize we were starting a new page, so I'm re-adding the picture for you to look at again to imagine the faucet being oil rubbed bronze metal with no wood on the handles.





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Those who dance always seem crazy to those who can't hear the music.

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Tuesday, June 23, 2026 1:13 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


To help you visualize it further, this is kind of what I'm thinking for the faucet, Brenda.



I actually really like that design vs. the first 3 or 4 pages of results I looked at, but the price is way too cheap.

I already kinda cheaped out with that kitchen faucet and consider myself pretty lucky how good that faucet has held up over the years so far, but I know not to abuse it. As cheap as I am, $35 for a bathroom faucet in a world where I couldn't go to McDonalds and not leave hungry unless I spent $10 doesn't make a whole lot of sense to me.

I absolutely hate, hate, hate, hate, hate plumbing and I'm only doing this once!



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Those who dance always seem crazy to those who can't hear the music.

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Tuesday, June 23, 2026 1:26 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Electric is fun. (At least in America it is...)

If you're playing fast and loose, you might decide that the time and effort spent finding the right breaker and flipping it first isn't worth it and you're making a gamble that everything goes smooth and you don't don't teach yourself a good lesson that you still haven't learned from the last time or two or twenty-two that you were taught it and it didn't stick.

But as long as you aren't standing in a puddle in your basement or ankle deep in tub water while you're doing it, you're probably going to be alright.

And if you screw something up, as long as you know the basics and have been putting safety and code first, the worst thing that happens is you have to do figure out what you did wrong, connect up all the bits the right way and fire it up again.


You mess up plumbing???... now you've got a big wet mess on your hands. 100 times as bad if we're talking about drainage or toilets and not just the clean supply-side water for the faucet.

Everything about plumbing is just awful. I still do everything myself up to and including swapping out sump pumps in my boxers, knee deep in freezing cold water, because that's how cheap I am.

But nearly every time I've ever have had to deal with plumbing, it was a different problem that required learning something new I'll probably never need to know again, and it's rarely ever been something I can bring to the next plumbing issue I've had to deal with. And at least half of those times it was in the middle of a goddamned mini-catastrophy too, so the added pressure is always fun.


Me? I'll take the occasional stupidity-reminder zap over working with water any day. I tip my hats to plumbers. I know it ain't rocket science and after 20+ years of mastering the trade it's all super easy to do, but for those of us who don't have those skills what you do is a godsend.

People don't really know, until they really know.

And most of 'em will never know.



PS (OR PSA): I do not suggest or condone swapping out any outlets or switches while the breaker is still on. Do not do that. It's something that a guy taught me a LONG time ago and how to do it carefully, but 20 years later it didn't miss me that he never worked on electric without the breaker being off first.

Not gonna lie... I thought about doing it today. In fact, I did get the old switch off with the breaker on, and I was 2/3rds of the way getting the old outlet off too... but the reason I turned off the breaker was hidden in that unexpected fraction...

Because, ya see... I should have only been 1/2 way done with the job.

But they did that thing I HATE (and should be against code if it isn't) where they just remove some of the coating off the neutral wire and wrap that around one single screw on the outlet and just continue to fish it down the line without ever cutting it.

Why shouldn't you do that if it works?

First off... Stop being lazy and just do it the right way.

But for real, Because, just as I knew was going to happen, I had abnormally short neutral wires I now had to tie back into the new GFCI outlet. And they NEEDED to be separate on the GFCI because the LOAD lines to the light and 2nd outlet are run from an entirely separate point on the back of the outlet from the LINE in hot/neutral on a GFCI. It's not just two separate screws that attach to the very same metal bar on the Neutral side of a normal outlet (the very reason it works just fine the wrong way on normal outlets).

I still did it without making pigtails since I've attached outlets to wires much shorter than this before (not in my house or of my own accord), but seeing stuff like this in old houses is what's so annoying about doing electric work in them.

Although... it is fun too.

That's why I've always liked working with it.

It's always a puzzle that needs solving and I've never encountered a time where I felt the difficulty of solving that puzzle was insurmountable, and it was always worth the payoff in the end.



But anyway... yeah. That stupid doubled up wire put an abrupt end to my attempting to switch the outlet to a GFCI while the power was on, but the good news is that the tension level while doing the work was downgraded from "Diffusing a Bomb" to only "Changing the Oil".

Yeah... My thrill-seeking days may have come to a middle, but Trust Me...

It was Game Over.

You do NOT want to find out what happens when you cut a neutral wire on a live circuit.

I may or may not still have a tool that could help you visualize what must have happened for it to come out of the fight looking like it does.

Poor thing never stood a chance.




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Those who dance always seem crazy to those who can't hear the music.

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Tuesday, June 23, 2026 3:17 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Nearly everything you wrote about wiring went by me. But I hear ya on the plumbing!

Oh, I'm 100% on dark color for the trim! It'll look like it's an intentional part of the cabinet.

And I like the look of the faucet that you're aiming for too. I hate those midget faucets that were so common back then. IDK if there's much difference between vanity faucet models, but when we had to replace the kitchen sink faucet I looked pretty hard at the dimensions and specifically bought one that not only had a high arch but also came out over the sink farther. That way, there's less splash behind when you put something into the stream. And BTW Delta won by 1".

*****

I thought last month was bad! Back in May, hubby had a trial spinal block and a followup, a Zio monitor for 2 weeks, a couple of presurgical appointments and serious sinus surgery. Daughter had a telemed and an ultrasound, and the van went in for service.

THIS month was worse! I developed a big lump on my leg, hubby's root canal crown fell off, our AC started leaking thru the ceiling, I had a followup with my internist and oncologist, two knee injections, foot X-rays (arthritis in both feet, which explains why they hurt), the van crapped out, the dog had a prolapse and required an emergency spay, the AC people found rats in the attic crawl space, hubby had another spinal block, and a sinus surgery followup. I have the pest control people here today, and long overdue followup with my nephrologist tomorrow. Hubby and I have dermatology appointments at the end of the month, and I'm due for an abdominal ultrasound same day.

Some of that is my fault. I am determined to get all the family ailments and complaints addressed to the best of my ability. The regular followups were just coincidental scheduling, and then there were emergencies.

But boy, I am so glad this effing month is almost over!

Maybe now I can stop the backward trend on everything else (decluttering, yardwork, financial plan) and maybe start making progress!

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"It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal."- Henry Kissinger

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YOUR OPTIONS

NEW POSTS TODAY

USERPOST DATE
Brenda 06.23 00:25
Brenda 06.23 00:25
6ixStringJack 06.23 00:55
6ixStringJack 06.23 01:13
6ixStringJack 06.23 01:26
SIGNYM 06.23 15:17

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